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User: Forbman

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Comments · 1,681

  1. Re:this means nothing on US ISPs Become 'Copyright Cops' July 12th · · Score: 1

    Well, at least two of the ISPs (Time Warner, Comcast) are part of "content" provider companies...

  2. Re:Yeah, OK , so ... on Instant Messaging With Neutrinos · · Score: 1

    They might. Seeing as how they bury current neutrino detectors either several thousand feet below ground to help block out the background neutrinos from the sun as well as background cosmic radiation, I'm not seeing a practical solution in play for this right now.

    Theoretically, they can see the resulting disturbance of a sub moving under water on the sea surface with lasers, even if the sub is several hundred feet below the surface...

  3. Re:Why??? on Scientists Work Towards Naturally Caffeine-Free Coffee · · Score: 1

    Who's your meth dealer, then?

  4. Re:Caffeine-free coffee on Scientists Work Towards Naturally Caffeine-Free Coffee · · Score: 1

    ironically, there is case study info out there that fetuses have a sense of taste.

    Measure fetal heart rates after mother drinks regular coffee. It goes up as expected.

    Measure fetal heart rates after same mother then drinks decaf. Fetal heart rate still goes up...

  5. Re:Do companies really use Big Iron anymore? on NASA Unplugs Its Last Mainframe · · Score: 1

    ...but then add in financials - AP/AR, treasury, billingcstatements (but that is likely outsourced).
    I'm going to guess that payroll done by ADP is donre on mainframe...

  6. Re:What about external hazards? on TomTom Satnavs To Set Insurance Prices · · Score: 1

    Or the light has changed from green to yellow and you're in the zone of can I stop or not and you realize shit there is a cop (or red light cameras).
    Or you're driving in downtown chicago.

  7. Re:Loyalty cards are for you not them on TomTom Satnavs To Set Insurance Prices · · Score: 1

    Hmm... albertsons and safeway seemed to bring them out at the same time...so...

  8. Re:What about external hazards? on TomTom Satnavs To Set Insurance Prices · · Score: 1

    Or the lightjustturnedyellowcanistoporgunitandnotgetmypicturetaken moments? What about those?
    I just wonder when USAA will "feature" this...

  9. Re:One more issue on The Zuckerberg Tax · · Score: 1

    Well, if he can then afford only to go to a nursing home using medicare, he has to sell it anyways.
    can't protect that asset (this is consideted fraudulent) ... I guess in that context I'm noy seeing the problem.

    Kind of like low income/net worth person bitching about gas prices and insurance while acting as if he has some god-granted right, i tell ya, to keep driving that cadillac Escilade that uncle joe left him...

  10. Re:who wouldn't want access? on Installation of Blue Waters Petaflop Supercomputer Begins · · Score: 0, Troll

    well, it can run Crysis at about 42 fps...

  11. Re:Not on the disc on Anger With Game Content Lock Spurs Reaction From Studio Head Curt Shilling · · Score: 1

    While the actual software may not deteriorate over time (in and of itself), it can and does go stale. We all wax nostalgic over our favorite games of yore. How many would you really like to play now on the hardware you have? Want to play CGA graphics games like Bard's Tale on your 240 fps Crysis machine? No, as that would be visually painful. It may not even be possible to play these old games on new hardware or operating systems.

    I'm glad no one has tried to emulate the Atari 2600 in MAME (but maybe they have...)

    I think back and maybe it would be fun to occasionally play Civ 2. But not really. Now if the game's UI elements were updated, but the actual game play and mechanics were the same, including the spearmen killing tanks, that would be OK. What would be cool is if for newer versions of games like this if they could somehow shoehorn the old game play (and, in the case of Civ 2, the wonders movies...) into the new game as a scenario or...downloadable content.

  12. Re:Twitter isn't helping on Thai Gov't Welcomes Twitter's Censorship Plans · · Score: 1

    The odd effect of that, though, is...the censors win by default.

  13. Re:You all are worst than our leaders.. on Non-Copied Photo Is Ruled Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    Sure, the defendant was trying to get out of paying for the original work. Just like my company might not want to pay Corbis or whatnot their fees to use their stock photos, so it hires a photographer to take similar pictures (even though it probably cost far less to use the stock pictures). Now, according to this judge, Corbis (or any other stock photography shop) could go through their picture archives and sue my company for copyright "infringement"? That sucks.

    But would be OK if all the stock image companies started suing each other over whose stock images were "more original".

  14. Re:Misleading to call it "non-copied" on Non-Copied Photo Is Ruled Copyright Infringement · · Score: 1

    ...and then the point of being a lawyer becomes arguing that the law doesn't actually apply to your defendant, or does apply to the entity you're suing despite what its attorney is arguing.

  15. Re:Stop selling debt to China on WikiLeaks Cable: NASDAQ Folded To Chinese Pressure · · Score: 1

    (reposting from AC)

    Not the same AC, but...

    You are bigoted against creationists?

    Yes, and damn proud of that.

    Christians, Jews, Muslims, and Hindus?

    Now wait just a second, you seem to be confusing "being a creationist" with "following a religion". While it is true that creationists are generally following a religion, it is an extreme stretch to say that all Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, and practitioners of all other religions that you and I did not name, are creationists. I have no problems with the huge numbers of people who follow a religion but are not creationists. What I have a problem with are the few who are creationists, who don't give a damn what they do to the planet because "God will magically fix everything", who think critical thinking skills are crap and encourage their offspring to not have any, who make policy decisions based on there being an invisible sky daddy. Those are the people that the term "creationist" refers to, and those are the people that I am bigoted against.

  16. Re:Stop selling debt to China on WikiLeaks Cable: NASDAQ Folded To Chinese Pressure · · Score: 1

    Congress can override a presidential veto.

  17. Re:I Guarantee on Autonomous Vehicles and the Law · · Score: 1

    respond to a police car and it's flashing lights the same way a human would

    I hope you meant, "speed up and try to evade the cop car", perhaps by also having a database of the handling characteristics of the average cop Crown Vic or Challenger and how to take advantage of those platforms' weaknesses.

    And an automated system to shine a very bright light at the inevitable helicopter or drone that would be tasked to then follow me.

    Of course, there's the Motorola. How's my car going to disable their Motorolas?

  18. Re:And when the car breaks down? on Autonomous Vehicles and the Law · · Score: 1

    There will be other drivers who mess with these cars whilst they're operating on the road, and that will be interesting. Half-swerve into the lane in front of or next to the car, especially if it's also next to a large vehicle. Tail-gate it.

    Is there going to be massive data-logging on these cars from all the sensors (including last 30 secs or so of video recorded, from all of the sensors)?

    Then there will be a new set of lawyers to defend these drivers, too.

    "Honest, a rabbit jumped out into the road and I was trying to avoid it."

    And then there will be new highly oppressive laws to "protect" the occupants (oh, the children!) in the automated vehicles, more or less ensuring that the only way to drive is to have an automated car, like it or not.

    And you gotta figure that the trucking and bus companies will have their exceptions to the laws as well, especially with all of the international (Canada, Mexico) drivers who will argue that any "safety" laws will be against NAFTA, and they can't possibly afford to install the equipment on their trucks or upgrade them. The truckers will also argue vehemently that it is not technically feasible to automate their trucks due to all the nuances that professional human drivers have so they can cut out in front of cars so they can pass their cohorts, going downhill even, at +0.01 MPH speed differential, cause, you know, they can't wait just 20 more seconds for that car to go past that has no other vehicles behind it for at least one mile, break suddenly on black ice, etc. Another group of truckers (owner-operators) will argue that at least for them it is just another way to make them work for The Man (Schneider Trucking, for example).

    "My uncle has a country place
    That no one knows about.
    He says it used to be a farm,
    Before the Motor Law. ..." -Rush/Neal Peart

  19. Re:Lets kill them on Canadian SOPA Could Target YouTube · · Score: 1

    But Dodd is just the puppet. You really need to go after the CxO's of the media companies that are "represented" by the MPAA et al.

  20. Re:we need a tech star chamber on Canadian SOPA Could Target YouTube · · Score: 1

    But...then we'd just have a bunch of Sony Corp.'s.

    Comcast is already well down this road, having bought NBC Universal recently. This is not a good thing.

  21. Re:Oh, Canada on Canadian SOPA Could Target YouTube · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, it's not. The MPAA & RIAA (aka "MAFIAA") are practicing a form of legalized racketeering, bribery, intimidation, etc. Except rather than having thick-necked goons do the enforcement late at night, they're using slick attorneys and lobbyists to abstract away the dirty work from their hands to the government's.

    The "Rule of Law" argument is really nice and all, especially when you're writing all the rules.

    Remember, all the seizures of arts in France by the Nazis was "legal", too.

  22. Re:Money not necessarily 'wasted' on Apple Has Spent More Than $100 Million Suing Android Manufacturers · · Score: 1

    No, not a lamborghini, but a Pontiac Fiero, with a really bad body kit on it.

    Or even better, a Geo Metro with a red rattle can paint job (or Maaco), you know, with overspray still on the tires, Ferrari F-40-lookalike wheel covers (maybe they're even spinners, too!), two Lee Press-on NACA Scoops on the hood, and some Firrari (yes, the misspelling is intentional) badges stuck on in various places with double-sided tape. And they even forgot to 'shop the "K&N Filter" & "Michael Jordan" stickers from the rear window. If you look close enough, you can at least see where they removed or 'shopped the Buick-esque stick-on vent "holes" from the front fender.

    I'm sure pictures of the 2nd could be found on Jalopnik, Autoblog, etc...

  23. Re:Creating "3d" on Ask Slashdot: Tips On 2D To Stereo 3D Conversion? · · Score: 1

    But that's how stereographic photos work in general, whether one is using one camera or two (or more). This wasn't a new technique.

    I think the real trick were those 3-D system they smuggled in, where they could pan around the area in virtual 3-D that let them see the V-2 rockets as they were on their launch pads and get a feel [sic] for them.

  24. Re:Khan on Professor Resigns From Stanford To Launch Online Education Project · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Khan, you bloodsucker! You're going to have to do your own dirty work now! Do you hear me? Do you?"

  25. Re:does it even matter?! on Is Climate Change the New Evolution? · · Score: 1

    Yes, and currently that wealth shifting around increasingly continues to land in the pockets, hedge fund accounts, etc. of the very rich. But it's all "the natural order" to them.

    Stop peeing in my face and calling it lemon-lime gatorade.